Tags
Alaska, ancestry, Baker, Blythe, Cox, Deitrick, family-history, Genealogy, Kentucky, Ohio, Plavsic, Taylor', Texas, Utah
Ancestry has a “Recommended” list of individuals on my landing page. My 3rd great grandfather Jean Michel Kaiser is listed with a flag for records from a new collection in France. Unfortunately this is a collection only available to World Explorer subscribers. I’ll have to revisit this record once I upgrade for international research.
I had one new DNA match with a common ancestor identified. He was through my McCullough line. Hopefully I’ll get to that line in the next year or so.
Continuing on with the descendants of Jesse Cox and Mary Wagle. I am picking up where I left off with Richard’s son Eugene.
- Louisa Cox + David Taylor > Richard Lewis Taylor + Sarah Emma Isaacs
- Taylor
- Texas: Eastland, Gregg, Jackson, San Patricio, Harris, Victoria, Travis
- New Mexico: Quay
- Taylor
- Louisa Cox + David Taylor > Zachariah Taylor + Nancy Catherine Wright
- Taylor
- Kentucky: Estill, Oldham, Madison
- Utah: Salt Lake, Utah
- Ohio: Warren, Hamilton
- Baker
- Utah: Salt Lake, Utah
- Deitrick
- California
- Alaska
- Blythe
- Ohio: Hamilton
- Plavsic
- Ohio: Hamilton
- Taylor
Researching Zachariah’s son John D Taylor and his family was an adventure. From what I can piece together, John was living with his parents in 1900 and he was listed as a widower. There was evidence of a possible marriage in 1894, but I’m not certain if it was this John due to the location. John then married Stella Stratton in 1901. What was confusing is that I found a John D Taylor with a Della, not a Stella, in the census records. Next I received hints for death certificates for two daughters, Imogene and Dixie, who were born in 1902 and 1904, respectively, stating their parents were John and Stella. Hints for Stella show her in Idaho and Utah as early as 1907. Stella remarried in 1907 in Idaho and her daughters are listed with her husband’s last name instead of Taylor. That made it harder to find them. The revolving door of husbands wasn’t very helpful either.
As if those obstacles weren’t enough, John had a son with a widowed woman. This son was given his mother’s late husband’s name. Quite messy to untangle, if nothing else. I believe I am done with John.
Moving on, I am making progress on Zachariah’s son Homer and will continue to do so into next week.
Error resolution. The last available update: I have 5020 errors in the tree–525 possible duplicates, 4044 with no documents, 451 other errors.
- A father in law of a distant cousin. He and his wife were pruned from the tree.
- A distant cousin who needed a source added. Added sources for most of his family members as well.
- Another distant cousin who needed a source added.
Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,622 people
End of Week: 27,707 people
Change = + 85 persons
Tasks for coming week:
- Continue research on Isaac Cox, “The Immigrant” and his wife Susannah Tomlinson.
- Review Coxes of Cox Creek
- Run newspaper search, especially for articles recounting local history
- Review the Cox package of information from Sweden
- Look for documents in Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Kentucky